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May 19, 1912 - Image 4

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1912-05-19

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

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shoe

1

S,.S, GREGORY TO
ADDRESS LAWYERS
Anierican Bar Association President
Will Speak on "Opportunities '
For the Lawyer."
F ACUiLTY PLANS ENTERTAIN MENT
Mr. Stephen S. Gregory of Chicago,;
president of the American Bar Associ-
ation, will deliver a lecture
at 4:15 tomorrow afternoon in
room C of the law building. The sub-
ject of his lecture will be "Opportun-
ities for the Lawyer Today."
Senior laws will be seated first at
the lecture and then the doors will
be opened to first and sec$nd year
men. After the lecture members of
the law faculty will give a dinner at
the Union for Mr. Gregory and from
8 till 10 an informal reception for him
will be held at the Union where senior'
laws may have the opportunity to meet
him.
Mr. Gregory is among the best
known of the legal profession in this
country. He is a- writer of note on
subjects pertaining to law and his
lecture will deal with certain peculiar
phases of the law with which lawyers
of today have to contend and will be
especially directed to the practical
side of the subject.
This lecture is the first of a series
which has been arranged for senior
laws to be given by men well up in
the profession who are well qualified
to lecture on subjects of practical im-
portance to students who are about
to graduate from college and assume
the responsibilities of 'a lawyer.
Dates for the remainder of the lec-
tures will be announced later.

son (S) third. Time :24 1-5.
High jump-Sargent (M) first;,
height 6 feet 1-4 inch; Stiles (S) sec-
ond, height 5 feet 10 inches;
White (M) and Griest (M)
tied for third, height 5 feet 8 inches.
Broad jump-Waring (M) first;' dis-
tance 22 feet 3 inches; Cohn (M) see-
ond, distance 22 feet 2 3-4 inches;
Thompson (S) third, distance 22 feet.
Pole vault-Barton (M) first, height
11 feet 3 inches; Cook (M) and Van
Kammen(M) tied for second, no height
given.
Shot put-Kohler (M) first, distance
43 feet 6 3-4 inches; H. Smith (M)
second, distance 39 feet 7 inches; Bo-
gle (M) third, distance 39 feet 2 inch-
es.
Hammer throw-Kohler (M) first,
distance 144 feet; Street (S) second,
distance 141 feet 7 inches; H. Smith
(M) third, distance 131 feet 4 inches.
Discus throw-Kohler (M) first,
distance 125 feet 2 inches; Wiggins
(M) second, distance 115 feet 10 inch-
es; Smith (M) third, distance 112 feet
3 inches.
MUSIC AND DRAMA
Majestic Theater.
The all girl show at the Majestic
theater this week -will be a decided
innovation in vaudeville and the re-
sults will be watched with interest. A
vaudeville bill without the traditional
comedian would at first-thought seem
an impossibility but the girls on the
Majestic program will endeavor to
dispute this idea. The star act will
be Jesse Lasky's latest sensational
production known as "Visions D'Art"
and this will be a decided jiovelty in
every way. A beautiful girl model
will pose in various reproductions
from celebrated paintings and the ef-
fect is artistic and pleasing. in the
extreme.

ROYAL Tj
Chicago and N4
No tailor can or will exc
tailors in giving you wha
clothes but other tailors v
much more. Let us show
samples and take your im
Alimzand'&
215 Sowuth PM
VAIl
Y.W:C.A. WORKER WILL TELL
OF EXPERIENCES IN LONDON

Miss Ruth Rouse, a member of the
World's Committee of the Y. W. C. A.,
is in this country to visit a few student
associations. She will be here in Ann
Arbor one day. Today at 4 o'clock she
will meet the faculty ladies and col-
lege girls at an informal tea in New-
berry hall. Dean Jordan will preside,
and Miss Rouse will tell about her
work in London. She has had a great
deal of experience in settlement work,
being one of England's pioneers in
that movement. During her stay here
Miss Rouse is being entertained at
the home of Regent Beal. .

: workmen.
ry detail of
sion.
S according

ded
eml
son

Co.
Cor. Farmer St.

to Advertisers

Jeffersonian Debates Live Topic. to third. H
At a meeting of the Jeffersonian So- vans threw
ciety last evening the question, "Re- The coron
solved that the presidential term of results in th
office shall be six years, no president
subject to reelection," was debated.
The affirmative was supported by ,Bradley 3b
Chepsal, Goldman, and Pulley, the neg- Gorenflo 2b
ative by Brennan and Balkema. The Mogge rf ..
judges returned a unanimous vote in Griggs 1b
favor of the affirmative. Dawson If
Rogge ss ..
BIG DAY FOR THE "GRASS LID." Harvey cf
Bibbins c ..
Summery Headgear Supersedes Dusty Dodge p ...
Cap and Derby.
Straw Hat Day took. It took big. Totals
Sailors, men-of-war, little tugs, this
year's crop and the old boys of '92
blaked out in glory. The contests
and the baseball game drew scores of Duncanson
summery headgear. Bell If ....
Breathes there a man with purse Mitchell cf
so slim that he cannot celebrate this Munson rf .
festive occasion? The sign of thumbs- Lavans ss
up from Ann Arbor's elite gives life Rogers c ..
to "grass lid" ceremonials-and barr- Howard 1b
ing plutocrats, the caps and derbies Blackmore
were stowed away in blushing repose, Baribeau p
for every body was doin' it. ' Corbin p . .

TRACK TEAM VINDICATES
PREMACY.

SU-

6_

I

)AY,
~DAY

iHOV

I

,asky 'S
an Sensation
D'AR T

Bergere,

Paris

Z E N I T A
The Musical Cirl
LLIAN Tailor Made Girls
ING
and EDNA NORTHLANE
RIVOLI GIRLS
BURTON & Co.
)n Day 3p.m.
erved Seats

(Continued from page'1.)
3 inches, while Cohn placed second
with a leap of 22 feet 2 3-4 inches.
Thompson .of Syracuse negotiated an
even 22 feet for third place.
Michigan Strong in Weights.
In the weights, Michigan had things
all her own way, winning every place
save second in the hammer throw,
which was captured by Street of the
visiting aggregation. Kohler did not
equal his best marks, but he delivered
the goods, and took first in the shot
put and the hammer and discus
throws.
The summaries follow:
100 yard dash-Robertson (S) first;
Bond (M) second; Seward (M) third.
Time :10 1-5.
220 yard dash-Robertson (S) first;
Bond (M) second; Seward (M) third.
Time :22 fiat.
440 yard run-Reidpath (S) first;'
Fogg (S) second; Haff (M) third.
Time :49 flat. (Establishes new Fer-
ry field record.)_
880 yard run-Taylor (S) first; Otte
(M) second; Blake (M) third. Time
2:00 2-5.
Mile run-Hanavan (M) first; Al-
gire (S) and C. Smith (M) tied for
second. Time 4:29 1-5.
Two mile run-Haimbaugh (M)
first; Danes (S) second; Beardsley
(M) third. Time 9:51 2-5.
120 yard high hurdles-Craig (M)
first; Champlin (S) second; Kortright;
(S) third. Time :16 fiat.
220 yard low hurdles-Craig (M)
first; Champlin (S) second; Thomp-

STUDENTS' PARENTS LARGELY
FARMERS AND MERCHANTS.
Stntistics Published in "Alumnus"
Show Occupations of 3,569
4 eFathers.
Farming and trading are the two
most common employments among
the parents of students here in the
university, according to statistics com-
piled by Registrar Hall, which ap-
pear in the current i'ssue of the"Alum-
nus." Of the 3,569 cases investigated
during the registration of students
last fall, the occupations of merchant
and farmer each appeared on 20 per
cent of the cards.
A third group of the same size is
about equally divided between the
three occupations of mechanics, man-
ufacturers, and lawyers with from
five to eight per cent. A fourth di-
vision, somewhat larger, is divided in-
to the following eight occupations:
state and government officials, cler-
gymen, physicians, engineers, lum-
bermen, contractors, railway officials
and employees, and bankers and cap-
italists, with from two to five per cent.
each.
This last issue of the""Alumnus"
also contains an account of co-educa-
tion at Michigan. In the graduating
classes of the literary department the'
numbers of women and men are about
equal. There were 730 women en-
rolled in the entire university last
year.
"How Cornell Works out Her Ath-
letics-for-all System" is an article
telling of the success of the Ithacans'
new scheme. By a comprehensive
system of inter-department, inter-fra-
ternity, and the usual varsity athlet-
ics, which are all under the control of
a university athletic association and
board it has been brought about that
approximately 1,750 Cornell students
participate in some form of athletics.
Other articles are an account of
"Michigan Day" at St. Louis, and a
-history of the Department of Educa-
tion.
Another feature of the "Alumnus" is
the representation of the official col-
ors of the university which were re-
cently adopted by the Regents. A
picture of the class of 1852, at gradu-
ation, taken from the old daguereo-
type, appears in thetnumber.
Fair Sized Crowds Attend Art Exhibit.
The spring exhibit of the Ann Arbor
night, was attended by fair sized
crowds during the two weeks that it
was shown in Memorial hall. Many
May Festival visitors took advantage
of the opportunity to see the works
of- art last night and brought up the
total attendance considerably.

NEW RECORD SET BY 19114 IN
CONTESTS
(Continued from page 1.)
heads. Time was called frequently
during this quarter to prevent thosel
down from being trampled upon.
Matters were just becoming exciting
in the third quarter when a muffled
explosion was heard by the spectators,
and the group of stragglers on top of
the big ball was seen to sink down in3
a ,heap. The pushball had collapsed,1
and the event was necessarily at an1
end. -
Disperse Without Razing.
Following the contests, the victori-
ous sophs paraded their limp trophy
up State street to the Memorial build-
ing steps, where all were photograph-
ed. After the freshman picture was
taken, the crowds of underclassmen
disbanded without further enmity.
No injuries of a serious nature re-
suited from yesterday morning's con-
tests. General Chairman Picard re-
ceived a near "knock-out" while trying
to prevent pushing on one occasion,
after the gun had been fired, and a
number of other officials were more or
less unavoidably "roughed," but no
more deadly injuries were reported.
Use of Flour Prohibited.
Hoping to duplicate their strategy
of last fall when the sophs confused
their opponents by throwing flour into
their eyes, a number of second-year
men came to the field loaded with
"Gold Medal" yesterday morning. The
officials were prepared, however, and
the sophs were compelled to throw
away their "staff."

M. A. C. ...
Michigan .

Totals ..
*Batted f

ibeau 1, off C
Mogge, Bell;
Rogge, Gorenfl
Blackmore to
hits-off Baril
off Corbin 3 in
-Bibbins, Ro
beau; sacrific
vans; .umpii
time-1:40.

Lo

- S -

THIS IS

,,..

OUR "ENGLISH"
last that is admired so much by everyone be-
cause it is, without a doubt, the handsomest,
most perfect fitting flat last ever made---Thous-

:s have said so, even shoe salesmen selling other. lines of high-grade footwear.
We never have had enough shoes on this last to supply the demand so,
ving just received some more large shipments in both Shoes and Offords, we
uld advise you to call and be fitted while our sizes are complete.

Everything Good

Remember, we save you $1.50 to $2.00 per pair.

in the line of Smokers'
at the City Cigar Store

"PURFIELD S

Repairing

119

So. Main

Street

30

W.

meidt Styles
New Ideas in

Portrai ts

G. C.

'A.

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